Here are some interesting facts about Judaism.

Jesscasapian: True Torah Judaism says that the Torah is the Word of G-d, given word for word by G-d Himself to Moses, at Mount Sinai. Later explanations and interpretations were written in the Talmud and other works by holy people who had Divine Inspiration, based on their agreement with the Written Torah and acceptance by the worldwide Jewish community, are also accepted as G-d's direct Word.
Sadly, most Jews themselves have little understanding of their own faith, and come up with misconceptions, while at the same time, thinking they are experts in Judaism.
True Judaism can be discovered online at www.chabad.org.

The Christian Holy Bible consists of two parts, part 1 is the Old Testament, the ancient jewish scriptures. Torah, the Prophets, etc.
Part Two is called the New Testament and consists of the 4 Gospels of Jesus and the Books of Paul/Saul, and other writers. These books refer to Part 1 in as far as they references predict the coming of the Messiah.
Most Evangelical Christians operate on the assumption that since Jesus was a he followed the laws set down in the old Testament, and therefore so should we. Very few if any have studied the Old Testament with the help of Talmud or any other ancient Jewish sources. They just read the passages and "Cherry Pick" those that will help them prove their point.

The Torah is the Torah, and the Bible is the Bible. It makes no sense to call the Torah the Jewish Bible or call the Bible the Christian Torah. Not only is the content different, the books have very different roles in their respective religions. (Correct me if I'm wrong, but my understanding is that no Jews think God wrote the Torah; some believe Moses wrote it and others that it was variously authored. Some Christians do believe God wrote the Bible. Not me, but then the range of beliefs held by people who call themselves Christian is staggering -- though maybe not so astonishing considering you're accepted as a Christian if you say you are one; you needn't hold any particular beliefs (except the Jesus was divine as well as human) nor perform any particular rituals or acts or refrain from any. There's a church in my city that sends missionaries to Ireland to convert the Catholics to Christianity. OTOH, Catholics are the single largest Christian denomination in the U.S.
I am an Episcopalian whose father was a Jewish agnostic. I myself look to Jews to interpret Jewish holy writings for me; they've put their best and brightest to it for ages, while I know maybe a dozen random words of ancient Hebrew.